tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-91838773785371315452014-10-07T04:33:04.301+01:00Rays from across the pondA Tampa Bay Rays baseball blogJohnnynoreply@blogger.comBlogger104125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-40291738588112637542009-04-07T10:06:00.001+01:002009-04-07T10:10:06.016+01:00Success, according to MLB Advanced MediaA little update for y'all, after yesterday's catastrophe of an opening night. Mark Newman's article is now updated a little, under the title: "MLB.TV, season off to flying starts".<br /><br />Yeah.<br /><br />Now, maybe I'm judging harshly. So, to be fair, here is a random selection from the dozens of comments on that article:<br /><br /><blockquote>"I am very disgusted with what I am getting from this today. If Opening Day<br />is an indication of what this year is going to be like, we are screwed. MLB<br />should b much better at this."<br /><br />"my reception kept freezing the pictures at crucial times during the<br />mets reds game. very diappointed. same thing happening during the yankee oriole<br />game on now!! what's the problem??"<br /><br />"I don't think MLB is paying any attention to the problems. On the<br />"help" blog, the responses they give all sound like canned answers that are very<br />basic and do not address the real issues people are having. The problem is NOT<br />in our sets, it's on their end whether they want to admit it or not."<br /><br />"Maybe some of these deep pocketed executives can come and tell my 12<br />year old son why he can't watch his favorite team. WHAT A SCAM!!"<br /><br />"12:05 and I'm still getting errors. . . . clearly they are having<br />serious technical difficulties. You know what would make it less annoying?<br />Freaking admit it. Put a message up acknowledging the problems and apologizing.<br />Instead I look to see what the heck is happening and I find this article on how<br />awesome they say they are. It's an insult to those of us who have paid a bunch<br />of money to not be able to watch opening day."<br /><br />"I've been an MLB.tv subscriber since they first launched the service<br />years ago. Today was one of the very few times I have been unable to watch a<br />game -- the Texas / Cleveland feed was down almost the entire game."<br /></blockquote><br />Ok, there are a few (a very few) positive comments. But this article is just the tip of the iceberg. There are comments galore on the MLB.tv blog, and the support forums are almost overflowing with complaints and problems. With the usual reply being along the lines of, "its your hardware". Um, no it isn't. Its your problem.<br /><br />Its your problem, and it needs sorting. And it needs apologising for. It doesn't need a bragging article, front and centre on the MLB.com homepage, slapping yourself on the back for your service. That is arrogant beyond belief, and an insult to every single customer who hasn't received the service that they paid a lot of money for you.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-17904886433246192212009-04-06T21:41:00.006+01:002009-04-06T22:25:52.165+01:00An MLB.tv jokeFrom past/present MLBloggers' erstwhile friend Mark Newman, in his annual "news" article on MLB.com selling MLB.tv:<br /><div></div><br /><div><blockquote>Opening Day is a time for the players to step up and perform for real, and<br />the same is expected of the best technology in sports today. MLB.TV Premium has<br />gone through its own Spring Training, being carefully fine-tuned with the<br />assistance of the many fans who beta-tested it beginning with the World Baseball<br />Classic and on through Grapefruit and Cactus League exhibitions. Major League<br />Baseball Advanced Media developed this amazing technology with the fans and for<br />the fans, allowing them to follow the live action in a fashion previously<br />unimagined.<br /><br /><br />MLB.TV Premium is available for $109.99 for the entire year, a $10 drop<br />from 2008 despite multiple upgrades in features, quality and performance.<br />Highlights include dazzling HD picture quality (where HD is available), adaptive<br />bit-rate determination to ensure clarity along with manual override capability;<br />home and away broadcasts allowing you to choose which team's broadcast you<br />watch; a Live Radio Option that allow you to choose between TV or radio booth<br />feeds; a live game DVR and jump-to-inning navigation; picture-in-picture, which<br />will be huge when you need to follow other games that impact your team's pennant<br />race; a built-in live scoreboard of the day's games; game summaries and box<br />score widgets; full-screen and multi-view switching; a user preference setting<br />that can show/hide score spoilers; archived games and more.<br /></blockquote><br /></div><div>Yeah.</div><br /><div>Last year, with the standard Media Player, I could comfortably stream the highest quality video with virtually no buffering issues or freezing. The picture quality could only be described as excellent.</div><br /><div>Today?</div><br /><div>Judge for yourselves.</div><br /><div></div><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Lw7b9Mifukw/SdpsGNeppkI/AAAAAAAAAH0/tUO_mULfyn8/s1600-h/mlbtv.png"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5321684763644896834" style="WIDTH: 400px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 250px" alt="" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Lw7b9Mifukw/SdpsGNeppkI/AAAAAAAAAH0/tUO_mULfyn8/s400/mlbtv.png" border="0" /></a> <div></div><div></div><div>Not only is that terrible quality - I mean it is back to the 400k days from 3 or 4 years ago - but its not even streaming smoothly. It just freezes constantly. Right now I am listening to the voiceover from some advert while looking at a freeze of Jeremy Guthrie.<p></div><div></div><div></div><div>Some two or three weeks ago (shockingly my last post!) I pondered on the potential problems of MLB.tv's much heralded new player. Judging from the support blog and support forums reactions, my worst fears have been realised on a rather large scale.<p></div><div></div><div></div><div>And the support being offered? A joke. "Try rebooting your modem." "What graphics card do you have?" "Try reinstalling NextDef." Ha. If only. You can reinstall NextDef to your heart's content, and you still won't be able to access the Hi Def feed. Not that it would stream if you could.<p></div><div></div><div></div><div>I don't, by any means, claim to be a computer expert, but I know enough. I know that this problem is not at my end - however much the support team wish to make us believe that it is so.<p></div><div></div><div></div><div>This is a spectacular failure on MLB Advanced Media's part. Trying to launch what is a potentially excellent player with massively limited testing, and with no option of using the tried and tested old player as a backup for when the inevitable happens. Instead, I cannot watch baseball at the moment. I cannot get the product that I paid for. And I am not the only one.</div><div></div><div>MLB.tv is the only way that I can watch baseball. For that opportunity, I am thankful. But I paid a lot of money. And I am not receiving the product as advertised. Hell, right now I am not receiving any product at all. <p></div><div></div><div></div><div>That is totally unacceptable. <p></div><div></div><div></div><div>And while me ranting may not achieve anything - it won't miraculously fix the problem, and I highly doubt that it will get me any form of compensation, it will make me feel better. And to that end, I am going to go against my normal tendencies, and spread this blog post as widely as I possibly can.<p></div><div></div><div></div><div>Sort it out MLBAM. Sort out MLB.tv. Do it now. And apologise. Publicly and profusely. It is the very least you can do.</div>Johnnynoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-82766068149629819862009-03-17T15:13:00.003+00:002009-03-17T16:00:57.904+00:00March means MLB.tvPretty much every year since I've been blogging I've posted something around this time of year about <strong>MLB.tv.</strong> Usually, it has to be said, a complaint of some kind. You see, I have a sort of love-hate relationship with my main source of baseball action.<br /><br />I'm sure that most people who have any kind of interaction with MLB Advanced Media (MLBAM) will understand what I mean. And while I am of course grateful to be able to watch hundreds of baseball games from thousands of miles away, this years post is, to some extent at least, another complaint. <br /><br />I do feel that I should make clear though, that I love MLB.tv. I love the service it provides. I love being able to watch 162 Rays games. I love being able to watch the playoffs, spring training, the WBC and the all-star game. I love having baseball on demand whenever I feel like watching it. Last year, I upgraded from standard to premium, and it was worth every single penny. Or indeed cent. Improved video quality, and the much-needed ability to choose either the home or away TV feed simply made things even better.<br /><br />The problem is, that all that brilliance and accessibility makes the small problems that do exist even more glaring. Take ad breaks. When MLB.tv first started (or at least when I first started using it) the feed simply played all the adverts, as shown on the local TV station. Fine, no problem with that whatsoever. But then MLBAM decided to cut away from the feed during ad breaks. Sometimes to show their own ads for MLB.com, and associated sponsors, and sometimes just to show a placeholder MLB.tv screen. Fine, that's ok too - I don't need to see ads for random car dealerships in Pinellas County. It is unlikely that I will be looking to purchase a used Chevy from South Florida anytime soon. But, to cut away from and back to the feed needs somebody to be concentrating on the game the whole time. Which, when there are 15 games (and 30 feeds) on offer, simply doesn't happen. I have lost count of the number of times when the feed doesn't cut back in to hear the start of the commentators conversations. Worse, I have lost count of the number of times where the feed doesn't cut back in time to see the first few pitches of an inning. I can even remember a couple of times when whole at-bats (and on one occasion an entire half inning) weren't transmitted to MLB.tv subscribers. That is quite simply unacceptable.<br /><br />Then there are picture sizing issues. That was my theme last year. A move to an updated version of media player meant different zooming options were available - and that all broadcasts were presented in widescreen. A move that resulted in 90% of the games I watched last year not taking up anywhere near the whole of my computer monitor when I put them into fullscreen mode.<br /><br /><strong>So, this year's complaint.</strong> The new player. First off, can I say for the record that from what I've seen so far it is going to be fantastic. <em>Going to be.</em><br /><br />Right now there are problems galore. Ok, so its only in Beta, but there is a huge amount of work to be done if it is to be fully up to speed for opening day. <strong>IF</strong> the picture quality truly gives stable, HD-level output, it will be brilliant. But right now the quality setting jumps all over the place for no apparent reason. <strong>IF</strong> the DVR functionality works properly, it will be truly awesome for anyone who actually has to do other things while the game is on. But right now, it isn't exactly ready. <strong> IF</strong> the multi-game and picture-in-picture options work, then it'll be great fun for keeping track on what's going on elsewhere. But right now, the viewing experience isn't even first rate with one solitary game available.<br /><br />Now, there's still a couple of weeks until Opening Day, so I can only hope that these problems will be sorted. But here's the thing that has annoyed me, and it strikes me as typical of MLBAM's attitude to its users. <a href="http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/subscriptions/index.jsp?c_id=mlb&amp;affiliateId=mlbMENUMLBTVPR">This page</a> advertises the subscription. I cannot see any mention that the player is still only in Beta mode. It looks to me as though it is up and running and ready to go.<br /><br />And, hold on a minute, why isn't it? I realise that it isn't possible to fully test its capabilities during the offseason - but surely, if MLBAM were planning to herald its features as a major part of their subscription drive, then they ought least to have been able to ensure that it could successfully broadcast a single feed at a sustained quality level? Its that kind of attitude that annoys me - the assumption that customers will be happy to be used as testers. I mean, I'd be renewing my subscription whatever, but what of the people who looked at that advert and thought, <em>"ooh, hi-def and DVR on my computer? I'll have some of that!"</em>? They'll shell out their money, and then find they've got to test out an unready product - at least for spring training, and potentially going into the regular season as well. Not exactly responsible business practice.<br /><br /><strong>Anyhow</strong>, semi-coherent rant over. As I said, I am eternally grateful for the opportunity to watch baseball over the 'net. I just find the customer relations and cavalier attitude of MLBAM incredibly frustrating. Especially since they don't need to be. They have a fantastic product to sell. Be honest, be open, be truthful. Develop what they can, when they can. Test it, test it again, release it. The business will take care of itself - and you'll get easy, good press into the bargain. Not random postings across the internet complaining about your customer service. Maybe it's just me, but I think I'm talking sense.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-8473396831895558202009-03-03T12:12:00.005+00:002009-03-03T12:49:21.139+00:00Spring watch - 28/2-2/3As it turns out, I got home in plenty of time to watch the <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays</span></strong>-<span style="color:#ff0000;">Phillies</span> matchup on Saturday evening. And it turned out to be a bit of a slugfest at a breezy Bright House Field in Clearwater. <strong>Mitch Talbot</strong> - one of the outsiders for the rotation's fifth spot - was starting for the Rays, and suffered a rough first inning. He gave up five runs and three homeruns before getting out of it. Still, he came back and pitched a scoreless second and third, so it wasn't a total disaster for him.<br /><br />Next up in the battle for rotation duties was <strong>Jason Hammel</strong>, starting against the Jays on Sunday. By all accounts he put himself to the front of the line with four scoreless innings (three hits allowed). <strong>Carlos Hernandez</strong> followed, but was hampered by some shaky defense - it looks like the Rays have been comitting more than their fair share of errors so far this spring. Not that I'm overly worried. Not yet, anyway.<br /><br />Positive signs are coming from the few regulars who have been playing so far - <strong>CC</strong> belted two triples in Sunday's game, while <strong>Evan Longoria</strong> hit 3 doubles in 2 games over the weekend.<br /><br />Yesterday, <strong>Wade Davis</strong> went to the hill for the second time this spring. He's the longest shot of all to make the rotation, but he had another fine outing anyway - 3 2/3 innings, no runs, just one hit allowed. The Rays won that one over the Cards, to move their spring record to 2-4, if that means anything at this point.<br /><br />Story so far on the pitching - definitely looking good. The big four (<strong>Kaz, Shields, Garza</strong> and <strong>Sonnanstine</strong>) won't start pitching until the weekend, but the competition behind them is looking fierce. Right now, <strong>Jason Hammel</strong> is looking the favourite to get the nod, although it has been solid outings all round. I reckon we could well see Hammel take the fifth spot, with <strong>Jeff Niemann</strong> in the 'pen to start the year. Then we'll have <strong>Wade Davis, Mitch Talbot</strong> and <strong>David Price</strong> starting the year at AAA - I'd advise hitters looking to get their swing honed to avoid playing against Durham for the first month or so of the season!Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-18257478970792891542009-02-27T09:12:00.006+00:002009-02-27T09:43:29.618+00:00Spring watch - 26/2I rushed home from work last night to catch the first televised <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays</span></strong> game of the spring - against the Yankees in Tampa. Missed the top of the first (which is fairly usual for weekday afternoon games), but caught the rest of what turned out to be the Rays' second straight loss to start the spring.<br /><br />Best performance for the Rays by a distance was from <strong>Wade Davis</strong>, who was making the start. He mowed through two perfect innings against a strong Yankees team (Damon, Jeter, Teixeira, A-Rod, etc), picking up three strikeouts along the way. What with the plethora of choices that we have for the fifth spot in the rotation, its highly unlikely that Davis is going to be starting the season anywhere other than AAA. Still, its an encouraging start for him, and a great reminder to everyone that the pitching talent in the Rays' farm system isn't all about David Price.<br /><br />Following Davis on the hill was <strong>Chad Orvella</strong> - a very welcome site following his struggles with injuries. He gave up a homer to Jorge Posada with his first pitch, but retired the next three batters in order. If Orvella can get fully healthy then its possible that he'll have an outside shot at making the 'pen. I was a big fan of his when he first broke into the majors, so it'll be interesting to see how what kind of shape he's in now.<br /><br />At the plate there wasn't an awful lot going on for the Rays. They picked up their first run of the spring courtesy of an RBI-single from <strong>Jon Weber</strong>, but otherwise it was pretty quiet. The highlight play on defense was a terrific running catch by our late-inning centrefielder (who I'm reliably informed by the St Pete Times was <strong>Ray Sadler</strong>).<br /><br />Still, despite the loss, it was good to see the Rays in action again (even if it meant watch the YES network's coverage...). Next live game is Saturday afternoon against the Phillies. I'll be at a Six Nations Rugby game, so not sure if I'll be able to see any live, or if I'll be watching on Sunday morning. <strong>Mitch Talbot</strong> will be starting that one for the Rays I think - another of the contenders for the rotation (<strong>Jeff Niemann</strong> is starting today). What with the good performances so far from <strong>Carlos Hernandez, Jason Hammel</strong> and now <strong>Davis</strong>, it's looking like it could be an interesting spring.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-15437319777072006432009-02-24T13:13:00.002+00:002009-02-24T13:48:05.961+00:00Spring back to (blogging) lifeHmm. So, I was going to write something trying to justify not putting up a single post for over two months. I even started typing it. But let's face it. There is no possible justification for taking such a holiday right after your team wins a ridiculously improbable American League championship.<br /><br />But hey-ho.<br /><br />The dark months of winter have passed (well, February in Scotland is still firmly winter, but you know what I mean...), the American football season is over, and the (proper) football season in England is reaching its climax. <br /><br />And yes, baseball is back.<br /><br />In an odd way, I'm not quite excited yet as I normally am by the time Spring Training kicks into gear. I have a feeling its partly due to the fact that last year I was still watching baseball deep into October - a full month later than I've normally closed the book on the season. Then of course, there is the nagging fear - if that's the right word - of expectations. For possibly the first time ever as a <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays</span></strong> fan, I actually have some. I'm not really sure what to do with that. Frankly, while I know that I have some real expectations for the team this year, I'm not entirely sure what they are. A repeat AL title? Another win in the East? Just getting to the playoffs again? Being happy with challenging the hyper-spending Yankees and Red Sox? I don't know yet what I'd be happy with.<br /><br />Anyway, as ever in baseball its been all-change over the winter in St Pete. For a start, the Rays aren't in St Pete at the moment - they're at their new spring home in Charlotte. Then there are the player comings and goings. In: <strong>Pat Burrell, Matt Joyce, Gabe Kapler, Brian Shouse, Joe Nelson</strong>. Out: <strong>Edwin Jackson, Eric Hinske, Cliff Floyd, Rocco Baldelli, Trever Miller, Jonny Gomes</strong> (sad face :-( ). Plus a few others in both columns. At some point I'll probably give my thoughts on the new faces, but here is a rather important one for starters - I really don't know that I'm comfortable having two outfielders called Gabe. <br /><br />And since the last time I posted, <strong>Dewayne Staats</strong> has a new partner for the TV broadcasts. Not exactly a major news story in the grand scheme of things, but for someone who is limited to watching games on TV, it is important. I've already posted on the hard job that replacing Joe Magrane will be, and the man taking on the challenge is <strong>Kevin Kennedy</strong>. I've only read good things about him so far, so fingers crossed.<br /><br />I haven't seen yet when the first Rays spring training game will be shown on MLB.tv - will have to check on that. Actually, just typing this has made me a bit more excited about seeing them in action again.<br /><br />Excellent. Rays baseball 2009 is go.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-58336829065628143092008-12-11T09:00:00.004+00:002008-12-11T09:10:58.722+00:00Jackson for JoyceThe <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays</span></strong> made their first major move of the offseason yesterday, bringing in outfielder <strong>Matt Joyce</strong> from the <strong><span style="color:#ff6600;">Tigers </span></strong>in exchange for <strong>Edwin Jackson</strong>.<br /><br />I'm not totally up on Joyce - I imagine that I saw him play last season, but I can't really remember. From the numbers he looks like he had a pretty decent season, and the Rays are obviously keen on his power potential and defense in right. The impression I get is that while he'll compete for the starting job in '09, he may well be one for the future. I guess my one real surprise is that we've added another left-handed bat - we really could do with someone to hit from the other side!<br /><br />Obviously losing Jackson is a bit of a shame. He had his best year ever this season, and finally looked as though he was working through his inconsistancy issues. I think that Detroit have picked up a good player there. Still, with the pitching depth that the Rays have, any trade was always likely to involve either him or <strong>Andy Sonnanstine</strong>. And while Jackson is probably the more talented, I think I'd rather lose him that Sonny - as I've said many times this year, Sonny just has a great knack for winning.<br /><br />Jackson's departure also dramatically increases the likelihood that <strong>David Price</strong> will start the year in the Rays' rotation. Its not quite a done deal - <strong>Jeff Niemann</strong>, <strong>Mitch Talbot</strong> and <strong>Jason Hammel</strong> will have a shot as well - but I don't think it would be much of a surprise to see the big lefty win out.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-76138284261498375432008-11-20T08:45:00.004+00:002008-11-20T09:25:50.296+00:00Tampa Bay's other JoePossibly the best thing about watching sports live is the connection you feel to the players. You can almost feel like you're part of the team. My current seats at Southampton football games (for when I am actually back down south) are no more than 10 yards from the edge of the pitch. When I shout, the players (and the referee/linesmen!) can hear. I mean sure, I know that they're not going to take any notice of me, but they can hear. And when you're that close, watching them all season long, you get to know them. Not in a personal, go and have a chat way, but you get a feel for their personality, their style - basically of who they are.<br /><br />Its something you just don't get from watching on TV. And thats what I find sometimes about the Rays. As much as I love watching them, and as badly as I want them to do well, I don't have that connection to the team that comes with seeing them live.<br /><br />The wonderful thing though about watching baseball on TV is that you can get a connection. Not to the players or the manager, but, thanks to local TV stations showing virtually every game, to the broadcasters. And for me - and no doubt many other Rays fans - that link has always been <strong>Todd Kalas</strong>, <strong>Dewayne Staats</strong> and <strong>Joe Magrane</strong>.<br /><br />To me, they are as big a part of Rays baseball as anyone who puts on their glove and takes the field.<br /><br />And as far as I'm concerned, not only are they Rays institutions, they're among the very best in the business.<br /><br />Which is why I'm doubly saddened with the news announced earlier this week that in 2009, for the first time ever, Joe Magrane will not be calling the Rays.<br /><br />Its sadness on an entirely selfish level of course - Joe has been hired by MLB network, a fantastic opportunity for him to put his outstanding analytical and personable skills to use in front of a far larger audience (potentially) than he has for Rays games. I'm sure he will do fantastically - he is a brilliant broadcaster - and I do of course wish him the best of luck.<br /><br />But, at the risk of sounding incredibly cliched, it does make me want to cry out, "say it ain't so, Joe?"<br /><br />I know from experience, from the time (a few months? It seems more) before MLB.tv offered both the home and away feed, that not all broadcasters are created equal. Some can be patronising, some can be ignorant and ill-informed, and some can be just downright annoying. But Dewayne Staats and Joe Magrane are none of those things. They are entertaining, informative and - something that is too easily overlooked - talk <strong><em>to</em></strong> the viewers, and not at them. I'm piling up the cliches at a rapid rate now, but watching the Rays with them is honestly like inviting a couple of friends into your house.<br /><br />Now, as far as I know, the legend that is Dewayne Staats is staying on. As is "the strapping young lad" Todd Kalas. And no doubt a new man will come in, and in his own way be entertaining and informative. And we'll still have Staats' to guide us through the action.<br /><br />But Rays baseball without Dewayne <em>and</em> Joe in the booth - well, for me at least, its never going to be the same again.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-22811553410144235832008-11-13T08:48:00.004+00:002008-11-13T09:12:46.477+00:00Joe's the bossOne more piece of silverware for the <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays</span></strong> in this remarkable season. And the one that is, without question the most deserved. Ok, sure <strong>Evan Longoria</strong> was head and shoulders above the other rookies, and <strong>Carlos Pena</strong> was virtually automatic with the glove down at first base.<br /><br />But if either of those two prizes had gone elsewhere, you could just about have understood it. I mean other first basemen played their position well, and other rookies did have good years. But the manager of the year award?<br /><br />Well, there was nobody in baseball quite like <strong>Joe</strong>.<br /><br />He took the Major League's biggest joke, and turned it into a confident, can-do, must-see team.<br /><br />He took ten years of losing - and losing badly - and turned it into a World Series place.<br /><br />He took the league's worst record, and turned it into top spot in the toughest division in baseball.<br /><br /><strong>Joe Maddon</strong> of the <strong>Tampa Bay Rays</strong>, <strong><span style="color:#ffcc33;">American League Manager of the Year</span></strong>.<br /><br />I like how that sounds.<br /><br />For once, I'm not going to ramble on about why he deserves it, and the miracles that he has performed for us this year. Instead, I'm going to quote <a href="http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20081112&amp;content_id=3676381&amp;vkey=perspectives&amp;fext=.jsp&amp;c_id=mlb">this article </a>from MLB.com by Mike Bauman. I don't think I could possibly put it any better:<br /><em><blockquote><em>This was the kind of managing job that not only deserves an award, but also merits a textbook. This was a life lesson on how to turn failure into triumph, and in a hurry. Yes, Maddon is the American League Manager of the Year, but even that may be something of an understatement.</em></blockquote></em><br /><strong>Joe</strong> said before the season began that 9=8. And then went out and proved it. And you know what, now there is no argument that the boss who wears 70 is <strong>number 1</strong>.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-22518692697775364082008-11-11T09:50:00.003+00:002008-11-11T10:03:25.326+00:00Longo, meet ROYOk, so not exactly surprising news, but it is exciting never-the-less. Tampa Bay have their first ever BBWAA award winner, and it is who else but <strong>Evan Longoria</strong>. He was named yesterday as the American League's first unanimous <span style="color:#99ffff;"><strong>Rookie of the Year</strong></span> since 1997.<br /><br />I hardly need to go over Evan's amazing stats, or indeed his intangibles. Suffice to say he has been the brightest spot in a whole sea of brightness for the Rays in 2008 and the award, for which he was favourite even before he had a major league at-bat, is massively well deserved. Even missing a month through injury, he still dominated all other rookies. And while I would want to take nothing away from the other rookies who received the second and third place votes - Alexei Ramirez, Jacoby Ellsbury, Mike Aviles, Armando Galarraga, Joey Devine, Denard Span, Nick Blackburn, Joba Chamberlain and Brad Ziegler - they simply weren't in Evan's league in 2008. Mind you, nor were many established players.<br /><br />I think it says something pretty special about Longo that, in his first season in the bigs, he has already been made the Rays' player rep by his teammates. If that doesn't say something about his maturity, and the shear respect that other players have for him, then I don't know what does.<br /><br />Longo is a superstar. And long may that continue.<br /><br />But for now Evan, enjoy the prize. You have certainly earned it.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-41394860122455480622008-11-07T09:38:00.002+00:002008-11-07T09:48:39.194+00:00Carlos is GoldenAnd quite right too.<br /><br />The firsts just keep on coming for the Rays, even after the season has ended - yesterday <strong>Carlos Pena</strong> claimed the first ever <strong><span style="color:#ffcc00;">Gold Glove</span></strong> in Rays history for his outstanding work this year at first base. And although a lot of times the award seems to go to players who are not exactly known for their glovework (Rafael Palmeiro anyone?), Carlos is, in my mind, a truly deserving winner.<br /><br />All year long, commentators from across the country have been describing Pena as "a Gold Glove-calibre" first baseman. Now they can describe him as a Gold Glover. Its not just the fielding he does himself, its the confidence that he gives to the other infielders. They know that if they can get the throw in his vicinity then, more often than not, he's going to dig it out and make the play. He has fantastic range, great hands, and can turn the 3-6-3 double play as well as anyone that I've ever seen. In short, its very well deserved.<br /><br />And you know what, it could be the first of many for these Rays. I mean, look around the field and its hard to spot someone who doesn't have a chance of nabbing some gold in the future. Evan Longoria is as close to a dead-cert future winner as you will find, while CC is probably unlucky not to have one already. BJ Upton just needs to cut out a few sloppy plays, and he could get one, while Aki Iwamura must have been very close to winning in his first ever season at second. Hey, even Jason Bartlett and Dioner Navarro are above average defensively...Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-8834475877168699922008-10-30T21:13:00.003+00:002008-10-30T21:40:43.088+00:00They're all heroesYou know, the longer this season went on, the more I thought that I wasn't going to have to write this post. I thought that this was our year. I suppose, in many ways, it still has been our year.<br /><br />But take nothing away from the <span style="color:#ff0000;">Phillies</span>. They played better than the Rays all through the World Series, and they are fully deserving of their championship. Well done Philadelphia. Perhaps we'll make it to a rematch next year.<br /><br />To be honest, right from game one I wasn't quite as sure of a Rays win as I had been going in to it. <br /><br />(And before you draw any conclusions, no that's not why I wasn't blogging - I've had a ridiculously busy couple of weeks. And that combined with staying up all through the night has meant that I probably couldn't have written a coherent sentence even if I did have time to... Truth be told I probably still won't get back to something like normal service for another week or so yet, and then you can expect a proper set of season reviews, as well as the much anticipated (by me at least!) RAPAs - the Rays from Across the Pond Awards).<br /><br />As for the series - well, we didn't perform. We were out of form in pretty much every area, starting pitching, relief pitching, hitting and defense. And though we kept it close even through all that, you can't expect to win against a quality side like the Phillies if you're not playing at your best.<br /><br />And it's true, that after the amazing first 173 games of this season, not ending the year as World Champions is a disappointment.<br /><br />But I just want to think about that statement for a second. We can actually have a sense of disappointment that the Rays are not the Champions. The <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span></strong>. A team that's highpoint in its whole existance before this season was winning 70 games.<br /><br />What a year it has been.<br /><br />And every single player that has pulled on a Rays uniform is a hero. What they have achieved, even having fallen short of the biggest prize, will not be forgotten quickly by anyone in Rays-world. By anyone in the baseball world come to that.<br /><br />And even before I have the time to write a proper tribute to them all, I just wanted to take the opportunity to say that. These Rays have nothing to be disappointed about. They should feel only pride at what they have achieved. They have done the impossible. They have dispatched the Yankees and the Red Sox. They have won games that they never should have won, and won series that they never should have had a chance in. They have gone from nobodies to household names.<br /><br />And more than any of that - they have put Tampa Bay on the baseball map.<br /><br />Don't get me wrong, I would have liked the big one. But come February when pitchers and catchers report for Spring Training, the 2009 season will start and the defending American League Champions will have the word <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">RAYS</span></strong> emblazoned on their chests. <br /><br />I'll settle for that.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-17122625196803681942008-10-22T19:51:00.003+01:002008-10-22T19:55:51.966+01:00World Series<p>Five hours from now.</p><p>Tropicana Field, St Petersburg, Florida.</p><p>First pitch of the 2008 MLB World Series.</p><p>Scott Kazmir.</p><p>Of the Tampa Bay Rays.</p><p>Unreal. </p><p>I am very, very excited right now. Not to mention incredibly nervous. But, 1am UK time, you can be certain that I will be in front of the TV watching a little bit of history being made. And hoping that these amazing Rays might just be able to make a little more.</p><p>Go Rays!!!</p>Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-40122051354672479272008-10-20T12:37:00.005+01:002008-10-20T13:41:49.221+01:00ALCS game 7 - American. League. Champions.Say it slowly.<br /><br />Say it again.<br /><br />Believe it.<br /><br />The 2008 American League Champions are the Tampa Bay Rays.<br /><br />Playing for the 2008 World Series title will be the Tampa Bay Rays.<br /><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;">Boston Red Sox</span> 1 - <strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 3</span></strong><br /><br />Seven outs away, and coasting to a five-game win, to a game 7 decider against the defending World Champion Red Sox. I cannot begin to tell you how nervous I was last night. As it turns out, I was far more nervous than anyone wearing a Rays uniform.<br /><br />And you know what? After all they have done this year, that doesn't even surprise me anymore. They have taken on the best all year long, and they have never waivered and never faltered. They are unbelieveable.<br /><br />And last night, no-one was more unbelieveable than <strong>Matt Garza</strong>. He gave up a homerun to the second batter of the game, and then nothing. He simply powered through the dangerous Boston lineup time and time again. He didn't allow another hit until the seventh inning. He left after 7+, having struck out 9 and given up just the two hits. It was a magnificent display of pitching under huge pressure. And nobody could possibly argue that he wasn't a worthy choice for the series MVP.<br /><br />Garza's performance was just one of a littany of storybook tales that helped sned the Rays to their storybook World Series. The relief effort might have been even bigger. <strong>Dan Wheeler, JP Howell</strong> and <strong>Chad Bradford</strong> all pitched to a batter or two in the eighth, as Boston loaded the bases with two out and JD Drew coming to the plate. Who does <strong>Joe Maddon</strong> call from the 'pen? <strong>David Price</strong>. A 23-year-old rookie with just 5 regular season appearances. Crazy?<br /><br />Nah. Because <strong>David Price</strong> was clearly the coolest man in the Trop. Slider, slider, fastball, fastball. JD Drew struck out, inning over. Price comes back out for the ninth. He walks the leadoff man, but again shows his remarkable calmness - strikeout, strikeout, ground ball. His first ever save. In game 7 of the American League Championship Series. This kid is something special.<br /><br />So is <strong>Evan Longoria</strong>, whose impressive battling at-bat was responsible for tying the game up in the fourth. He fought off several pitches before flipping a pitch down the right field line for an RBI-double. And the way Garza was throwing, even against Jon Lester, only one team looked likely to win it.<br /><br />Move on to the fifth, and <strong>Willy Aybar</strong> is on second. <strong>Rocco Baldelli</strong> comes to the plate with an 0-6 career mark against Lester. This is a Rays' fairytale right? Well then, how about a game-winning RBI for a long-tenured Ray who had earlier in the year been diagnosed with a condition that left him in a constant state of fatigue, and which meant that he wasn't certain whether he would ever play Major League Baseball again. Sounds good to me. Rocco slapped the ball into left for a single and Aybar came motoring around to score the go-ahead run.<br /><br /><strong>Aybar </strong>has been a bit of a hero for the Rays this season as well, and he gave the team some breathing room in the seventh, going deep for the second time in the series..<br /><br />And now the Rays are going to another series.<br /><br />The World Series.<br /><br />I'm not quite sure I can believe it.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-31408261591828247572008-10-20T12:32:00.002+01:002008-10-20T12:36:34.919+01:00ALCS games 5 & 6 - Sucked<span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 7 - <strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;">Boston Red Sox</span> 8</span></strong><br /><strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;">Boston Red Sox</span> 4</span></strong> - <span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 2<br /><br />Ok, so a Boston comeback of some sort was almost inevitable. The manner of it was potentially devastating. I am honestly not sure that I could have faced writing about these two games - although that is not the reason I didn't. I was travelling back to Basingstoke on Friday, and out all day on Saturday and Sunday. I'm sure I will look back at these two games at some point, but for now lets just say that they sucked.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-84859110804785640982008-10-15T09:45:00.006+01:002008-10-15T11:05:42.906+01:00ALCS game 4 - Wow, just wow<strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 13</span></strong> - <span style="color:#cc0000;">Boston Red Sox</span> 4<br /><br />I just don't know how we are doing this. I mean, I know this Rays team is good - very, very good - but still, this is the first ever postseason for most of them, and they're playing at Fenway against the been there, done that, got the t-shirt Red Sox. The defending World Champion Red Sox.<br /><br />But man, are we playing some good baseball. And while the Sox are most definitely not out of it yet - their ALCS comebacks of recent years are still fresh in the memory - if we can carry on pitching, hitting and fielding like we have in the last few games, then there is no reason why the first pitch of the World Series couldn't be thrown at Tropicana Field. We need one win in the next three games to get there. <em>That</em> is a scary thought.<br /><br />Now I am stupidly tired this morning (game finished at 4.18AM, I went to bed and set my alarm for 8AM...), but I don't care. Last night's game was totally worth it. Three hours and seven minutes of pure Rays-world joy.<br /><br />It started in the top of the first. <strong>BJ Upton</strong> walked (and stole second), and <strong>Carlos Pena</strong> - who had homered in the ninth to round out game 3 - carried on where he had left off by drilling a Tim Wakefield floater the other way and into the Monster seats. That brought up the Rays' own monster, <strong>Evan Longoria</strong>, who promptly followed suit, relocating another pitch high above left field. The third consecutive game that Evan has homered in, and the fifth of his postseason. Setting a new record for a rookie. Have I mentioned before that Evan is quite good?<br /><br />The Rays couldn't add any more in the first (although there was still time for <strong>Carl Crawford</strong> to double and steal third before Wakefield got out of it), but they didn't let their 2008 dominance of their (former!) nemesis end there. With 2 outs in the third, CC reached on an infield single, stole second, and then was able to jog home as <strong>Willy Aybar</strong> connected for his second homerun of the year off of Wakefield - again batting righthanded, and depositing the ball over the Monster and into the Boston night. That was all she wrote for Wakefield, and after allowing <strong>Dioner Navarro</strong> to single, his day was done - 2 2/3 innings, 3 HR, 5 runs.<br /><br />Kevin Cash pulled a run back for Boston in the bottom of the inning with a solo homer, but the Rays just had to wait for the dynamic duo of <strong>Crawford and Aybar</strong> to come back to the plate to get that 5-run advantage back. That happened in the fifth, as Crawford drilled his second double of the night and was then singled home by Aybar.<br /><br />One inning later, and the 5-run lead became a 10-run lead. <strong>Fernando Perez</strong> made the first and last outs of the inning, but everything in between turned to gold. <strong>Jason Bartlett</strong> tripled. <strong>Aki Iwamura</strong> walked. <strong>BJ Upton</strong> singled home Bartlett. <strong>Carlos Pena</strong> walked. <strong>Evan Longoria</strong> walked in Aki. <strong>Carl Crawford</strong> singled in Upton. <strong>Willy Aybar</strong> singled in Pena. And <strong>Dioner Navarro</strong> grounded, out scoring Longo. That's the way things have gone these first two games at Fenway. Blink and you risk missing a whole bunch of Rays runs. This team is (as are most) at its most dangerous when stringing good at-bats together. And boy have they done that in games 3 and 4.<br /><br />The Rays scoring was completed in the eighth, by - guess who - <strong>Crawford and Aybar</strong>. After Pena walked to lead off the inning, CC tripled to right - his fifth hit of an extraordinary night. Considering that he missed the last month and a half on the regular season, and indeed prior to game 1 of the ALDS had not swung a bat in anger since early August, Carl has been nothing short of amazing. For the postseason, he is hitting .429 with 3 extra-base hits, 6 RBI and 5 steals. This is the <strong>Carl Crawford</strong> that is the envy of General Managers across the league. When CC is on, he makes things happen.<br /><br />While CC's night may have been more running-intensive, <strong>Willy Aybar</strong> quietly put together a superb show of his own. He rounded out things with an RBI-single to score Crawford, taking his line for the night to 4-5, HR, 5 RBI. I think along with other Rays fans I can't say enough about Willy. I guess we were all quietly pleased when he got injured in early April, as it meant Evan arrived sooner than possibly expected, but since his return Aybar has been a key piece of this club. The super-sub extraordinaire. What a great (and unheralded) pick-up he was last winter. Just one in an ever-growing list by <strong>Andrew Friedman</strong> and the Rays' front office.<br /><br />While the hitting spectacular was going on in the tops of the innings, in the bottoms <strong>Andy Sonnanstine</strong> was doing what he does best - winning. He pretty much coasted through the game. His final line was blotted by a couple of excuse-me runs late on when the game was already effectively over, but even so it is not to be sniffed at - 7 1/3 IP, 6 H, 4 R (3 ER), 1 BB, 2 K. And the big W. <strong>Trever Miller</strong> and <strong>Edwin Jackson</strong> got the final five outs, and that was that. I actually feel I should right more about Sonny, because he was excellent, but really there's not that much that you can say about him. He's just so understated, but so good with it. Through 6 innings (by which time the Rays had scored 11), he had given up just 2 hits, and had retired 12 straight. That's 12 straight Sox. Ok, so they're not hitting well at the moment, but that is impressive in any context.<br /><br />Also impressive was the Rays defense. We actually committed three errors (the first of the entire postseason), but they were all excusable - Longoria was charged with two on a play he was trying to make whilst avoiding a flying piece of Jason Bay's bat, and BJ with one when he overran a ball late on. <strong>Upton</strong> was the star of the show in the field though, chasing down fly balls with ridiculous ease. You often hear commentators talking about his gliding stride, and sometimes it is hard to believe that he is moving fast. But watching him cover the ground in deep left-centre at Fenway, and you'd find it hard to believe that there is a better centrefielder anywhere in baseball. It was remarkable. And he topped it all off with a frankly un-human throw from against the wall in the triangle, all the way to Carlos Pena at first base as Jason Bay returned there following a deep fly out. It was amazing. Seriously, I have seen clean-up hitters hit line drives that aren't as straight, hard and true as that throw was.<br /><br /><strong>So, that makes it 3 games to 1</strong> in favour of Tampa Bay. One win needed with possibly three more to play. The feelings that I mentioned in anticipation of that first ever postseason game are back with avengance. Nervousness, impatience and excitement. I've got to believe that we can do it, that we can get to the World Series, but at the same time I know that the Red Sox have come back from here before. I know they could do it, I've just got to try and convince myself that we won't let them do it. It is not going to be easy.<br /><br />Game 5 at Fenway is on Thursday night, and the Rays will be facing Dice-K again. A big improvement over game 1's hitting performance will be needed if we are to get a result. <strong>James Shields</strong> is scheduled to take the mound for Tampa Bay, but I have heard some reports that <strong>Joe Maddon </strong>may be tempted to go with <strong>Scott Kazmir</strong> instead. Kaz has a better track record than Shields at Fenway, and Shields would then be free to go in a potential game 6 at the Trop, where he frequently dominates. It'll be an interesting decision, but either way I know that they will be desperate to get the win. How sweet it would be to clinch the pennant at Fenway... But I'm not getting ahead of myself just yet.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-18297490674771652652008-10-14T19:26:00.003+01:002008-10-14T19:45:09.767+01:00Jonny Gomes rulesOk, so Jonny had a poor year at the plate. He got optioned down to Triple A in the summer, and didn't make much of an impact when he came back up in September.<br /><br />But he has contributed as much to the Rays getting to where they are, 2 games to 1 up in the ALCS, as almost anybody. For what he has lacked with the bat, he has more than made up for with hustle, heart and determination. The whole feel-good factor began in Spring Training when Jonny sprinted half way across the field to stand up for his teammate, Aki Iwamura, when he was (almost brutally) taken out by the Yanks' Shelley Duncan. And he's been a big part of keeping it going ever since.<br /><br />I've gone on plenty of times in the past about how Gomes is a great guy to have around the clubhouse, and I won't repeat that now. But I just wanted to highlight <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/playoffs2008/news/story?id=3643010">this story on ESPN</a>, as another example of why he's a great player to have for the community as well. Jonny Gomes is one of the real good guys.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-81280664286310188452008-10-14T09:37:00.010+01:002008-10-14T12:46:11.674+01:00ALCS game 3 - You ain't never going to keep them down<strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 9</span></strong> - <span style="color:#cc0000;">Boston Red Sox</span> 1<br /><br />I'm not even sure why I still get surprised at games like last night's. I mean, this is just what the 2008 Rays do. They take a situation where they're supposed to fold, supposed to be overwhelmed, and they come right out swinging their bats, making their pitches, and generally taking the game right to the opposition. And they keep winning. Its a crazy, crazy thing that these Rays have got going on.<br /><br />With Jon Lester making the start for the Sox, the prospects for a Rays win weren't exactly promising. Not only had Lester not been beaten at Fenway since April, but he had never lost to the Rays (indeed, Boston had never lost a game to the Rays in which he pitched) and he was working on an impressive 20+ inning streak of postseason baseball without allowing an earned run. <a name="9126534227"></a><br /><br />But its the Rays. <em>The 2008 Rays</em>. So you can throw all that out the window.<br /><br />It all started fairly innocuously. After a first inning that Lester sailed through 1-2-3, <strong>Evan Longoria </strong>led off the second with a walk. After CC struck out, <strong>Willy Aybar</strong> singled up the middle. <strong>Dioner Navarro</strong> stepped up, and watched as Jason Varitek failed to handle a fastball, allowing the runners to move up on the passed ball. Navvi then fought off a grounder to second, allowing Longoria, going on contact, to trot home without a throw. And just like that the Rays were on the board.<br /><br />And an inning later, they were even more on the board. <strong>Jason Bartlett</strong> led off with a single (continuing his impressive hitting year against leftys), and <strong>Aki Iwamura</strong> followed with a double of the Green Monster. Runners on second and third, nobody out, <strong>BJ Upton</strong> comes to the plate. I think it would be fair to say that BJ has found his power swing. He connected in a big way, launching the ball clear over the Monster, over the seats, and into the car park across the road. Another postseason homerun - his fifth in seven games. When BJ is hitting well, he is as good as just about anyone.<br /><br />Of course when you are looking for super-talented youngsters to compare Upton with, you should make sure you don't overlook his teammates. One of them in particular. <strong>Evan Longoria</strong>. And just to make sure that you don't, one out later Evan connected with a Jon Lester pitch of his own. It wasn't quite as mammoth a shot as Upton's, but it was still a no-doubter. Not only that, but it was perfectly placed, making a bee-line right into the hands of perhaps the only Rays fan sitting in the Monster seats. Ok, so he dropped it, but it was pretty good aim nonetheless. That makes it four playoff homers for Longo, tying Miguel Cabrera's rookie mark. Impressive.<br /><br />Meanwhile, <strong>Matt Garza</strong> was quietly pitching beautifully for the Rays as he sailed through six scoreless innings. The biggest threat came in the second, when the Sox got runners on second and third with one out. Garza didn't get fazed, and came back, getting Varitek out on a perfectly placed called third strike, before retiring Cora on a fly out to Upton.<br /><br />The score was still 5-0 Rays when Garza came out to start the seventh. Already at over 100 pitches, he allowed a walk and a single, finally leaving after 6+ innings, having given up 6 hits while striking out 5. <strong>JP Howell</strong> (Mr Clutch the Reliever) came in with the runners on first and third and nobody out. He gave up a sacrifice fly to right to Jacoby Ellsbury, but ended the threat right there, thanks to a beautiful double play ball against the dangerous Pedroia. <strong>Evan Longoria</strong> showed off just why he's going to win plenty of Gold Gloves in his career, making a running scoop and perfect throw to <strong>Aki</strong> at second, who then turned it as perfectly as ever.<br /><br />Then the Rays, not content with what had become a four run lead, did what they do best. They came back again and kept on hitting. With Paul Byrd on in relief, <strong>Crawford</strong> and <strong>Aybar</strong> led off with back-to-back singles. <strong>Navvi</strong> followed with another grounder to second, but this time the throw came home and despite CC's best efforts Varitek held on to the ball and made the first out. Still, never mind, it merely set the stage for the feel-good moment of the entire postseason.<br /><br />With two on and one out, up stepped <strong>Rocco Baldelli</strong>. A New Englander (he's from Rhode Island) and a Sox fan growing up, appearing in a playoff game at Fenway would have been huge enough. But having comeback from his myriad of injuries and illness, to even have a chance at being there is a testament to Rocco's unbelievable perserverence and dedication to playing the game. And he got his reward for all his hard-work in the biggest possible way. He turned on a pitch inside from Byrd and mashed it high above the Monster for a 3-run homer. Even Sox fans had to feel a little bit pleased for him. As for me, I couldn't be more delighted.<br /><br />That made it 8-1, and in the top of the ninth <strong>Carlos Pena</strong>, probably feeling a little left out at all the homerun hitting, joined in the party himself. He went the other way, to deep left-centre, hitting his first longball of the postseason. After hitting 30-odd in the regular season, he must almost be wondering whats going on - he's trailing in the wake of <strong>Upton's</strong> 5 homers, despite the fact that BJ hit only 9 during the whole regular season. On the other hand, Pena put down a perfect bunt single in the fifth, and proceeded to steal second - his third swipe of the playoffs, putting him comfortably ahead of speedster BJ.<br /><br />That blast rounded off the scoring for the Rays, while <strong>JP Howell</strong> coasted through the eighth and <strong>Edwin Jackson</strong> made his playoff debut with a scoreless ninth to wrap up the win, and edge the Rays ahead for the first time in the series, 2-1.<br /><br /><strong>Game four is tonight</strong>, and has intrigue written all over it. Starting for the Rays will be <strong>Andy Sonnanstine</strong>, fresh off a quality effort in the ALDS clincher. He pitched fantastically against the Sox this year, so no doubt will be looking for similar results tonight. Going for Boston will be long-time Rays' nemesis Tim Wakefield. He's actually 0-2 against Tampa Bay this year, but still 19-5 for his career. I hope we can continue our recent success against him, but he's one of those guys (ie a knuckleballer!) who you just don't ever know what sort of form he's going to be in. Expect to see another funky lineup from Maddon, probably righty-heavy, and very possibly with our switch-hitters batting righty as well. Unusual maybe, but it worked last time out. Lets hope it does again.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-50286954899888730922008-10-13T10:31:00.003+01:002008-10-13T11:23:54.238+01:00ALCS game 2 - ...But they get up again<span style="color:#cc0000;">Boston Red Sox</span> 8 - <strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 9</span></strong> (11 innings)<br /><br />The old football (soccer!) cliche says that it's a game of two halves. Judging by game 2, baseball may need to adopt it as well.<br /><br />The game was almost ridiculous in its pattern. So much so that I don't really know where to start. I guess the best thing is to start at the beginning, but you have to understand that by the time the game finished, 5 hours and 27 minutes after <strong>Scott Kazmir</strong> threw the first pitch, I was already struggling to remember back to that first inning. A (sleep-deprived) day and a half later, and I'm still not that much clearer. But start at the beginning I shall.<br /><br /><strong>Top of the First</strong>. <span style="color:#cc0000;">2-0 Red Sox</span>.<br /><strong>Scotty K</strong> actually got off to an encouraging start. Unfortunately for him, the Red Sox had an at-bat with 2 outs. Actually they had several. And they score when there are two out. Kaz eventually got out of the inning with just 2 on the board, but after throwing 38 pitches.<br /><br /><strong>Bottom of the First.</strong> 2-2.<br />Before the game, all the talk was about <strong>Evan Longoria's</strong> hitting slump. Evan turned 23 last week, but he has a maturity of someone who just turned 33. Pressure, what pressure? He promptly answers the nay-sayers by depositing a Josh Beckett offering over the fence in left for a two-run shot, his third of the postseason.<br /><br /><strong>Inning Two.</strong> 2-2.<br />A scoreless inning!<br /><br /><strong>Top of the Third</strong>. <span style="color:#cc0000;">3-2 Sox</span>.<br />Dustin Pedroia belts a solo homerun off of Kaz.<br /><br /><strong>Bottom of the Third</strong>. <span style="color:#99ffff;">4-3 Rays</span>.<br /><strong>BJ Upton</strong> continues his power renaissance, connecting for his fourth homerun of the playoffs. Three batters later <strong>Carl Crawford</strong> raps a single to score <strong>Evan Longoria</strong> and give the Rays their first lead of the night.<br /><br /><strong>Bottom of the Fourth</strong>. <span style="color:#99ffff;">5-3 Rays</span>.<br /><strong>Cliff Floyd</strong> leads off the inning by mashing a ball off of the front of the batters eye in straight away centre.<br /><br /><strong>Top of the Fifth</strong>. <span style="color:#cc0000;">6-5 Sox.</span><br />Dustin Pedroia connects off of <strong>Kaz</strong> for his second homer of the night. After retiring Ortiz, Kaz then gives up a third homerun, to Kevin Youkilis. End of the night for Kaz - his line of 4 1/3 innings, 6 hits, 5 ER, 3 BB and 2 Ks is not impressive. But its not the worst pitching line of the night. To relieve Kaz,<strong> Grant Balfour</strong> comes in. And promptly gives up just his second longball of the entire year, a solo effort for Jason Bay. He then walks Lowrie, necessitating the introduction of <strong>JP Howell</strong>, who finally gets the last 2 outs.<br /><br /><strong>Bottom of the Fifth</strong>. <span style="color:#99ffff;">8-6 Rays</span>.<br />Keep on keeping on. RBI single from <strong>Carlos Pena</strong>. RBI-double for <strong>Evan Longoria</strong> (his third extra-base hit of the night). Josh Beckett is pulled. He also went 4 1/3 innings, and would be charged with 8 runs on 9 hits with 5 K's. Lopez comes on in relief, and gives up another RBI-single to <strong>CC</strong>. Manny Delcarmen finishes off the inning.<br /><br /><strong>Top of the Sixth</strong>. <span style="color:#99ffff;">8-7 Rays</span>.<br />Uh-oh. Not safe yet. <strong>JP Howell</strong> gets into trouble, and in comes <strong>Chad Bradford</strong>. He promptly allows a RBI-double to Youkilis, but stops the damage right there.<br /><br /><strong>Bottom of the Sixth/Inning Seven</strong>. <span style="color:#99ffff;">8-7 Rays</span>.<br />No runs!<br /><br /><strong>Top of the Eighth</strong>. 8-8.<br />Eights are wild. <strong>Bradford</strong> allows the lead-off hitter, Pedroia, to get on base. <strong>Trever Miller</strong> comes in and walks Ortiz. Enter <strong>Dan Wheeler</strong>, and with the runners having moved up, he sails a pitch way over <strong>Dioner Navarro's</strong> head, allowing the tying run to score. He finishes of the inning.<br /><br /><strong>Inning Nine</strong>. 8-8.<br />A scoreless frame from <strong>Wheeler</strong>. Masterson gets two outs for the Sox before Papelbon comes in and sends it to extras.<br /><br /><strong>Inning Ten.</strong> 8-8.<br /><strong>Wheeler</strong> moves into heroic territory, pitching his third inning, scoreless. Papelbon holds the Rays without scoring though.<br /><br /><strong>Top of the Eleventh</strong>. 8-8.<br /><strong>Wheels</strong> amazingly comes out for a fourth inning's work. He gets one out, before handing over to <strong>David Price</strong>. Wheels final line - 3 1/3 IP, 1 hit, 0 ER, 2 BB, 4 Ks. His longest outing for something like 4 years. Price walks the first man he faces, but comes back to get the next two and holds the Sox without adding.<br /><br /><strong>Bottom of the Eleventh</strong>. <span style="color:#99ffff;">9-8 Rays</span>.<br /><strong>Wheels</strong> went 3 1/3, but Papelbon could only manage 1 1/3. So in comes Mike Timlin. <strong>Dioner Navarro </strong>draws the lead-off walk, and is replaced by pinch-runner <strong>Fernando Perez</strong>. <strong>Ben Zobrist</strong> follows, looking to bunt, and he draws a walk as well. <strong>Jason Bartlett</strong> grounds out to third, but the runners, both moving with the pitch, successfully move up. <strong>Aki Iwamura</strong> is intentionally walked to load the bases. Up steps <strong>BJ</strong>. Two strikes on him. A blooper down the line in right. JD Drew has a bead on it, and its not deep. He makes the catch and comes up throwing. <strong>Perez</strong> has tagged. The throw is up the third base line. Perez flys down towards home slides around Kevin Cash and slaps home plate. The marathon is over, and the good guys have won.<br /><br />Unbelieveable.<br /><br />One of, if not <em>the</em> best game I have ever watched. Just pure, unadulterated baseball entertainment. 15 runs in the first 5 1/2 innings. 2 runs in the final 5 1/2. And every single inning as enthralling as the last.<br /><br />It was an absolutely massive win for the Rays. Go to Fenway at 0-2 down, and the series would have been all but over. Going there at 1-1, and everything is still to play for. We've got to win at least one game there. But we can do that. We <strong>CAN</strong> do that.<br /><br />I can barely begin to mention everybody who came up big in game 2, but there is no doubt that the hero was <strong>Dan Wheeler</strong>. He could so easily have been the villain, allowing the Sox to tie the game on a wild pitch, but he didn't let it get to him. With just Price and Jackson left in the 'pen, he knuckled down and kept pitching. It was a truly amazing effort for any reliever, but for a guy who is pretty much a one-inning man normally, it was phenomenal. If we go on to win this series, there is no doubt that his effort will be looked at as one of the key turning points. Well done Wheels, I hope you enjoyed your off-day yesterday!<br /><br /><strong>This evening</strong>, the Rays have their toughest opponent, in Jon Lester. He has dominated the Rays this year, so getting a result against him is going to be very unlikely. That being said, if we could it would be a huge boost to the confidence and belief of the Rays. We're sending <strong>Matt Garza</strong> to the hill. He faltered against the White Sox last time out, so will want to bounce back with a strong outing this time. Here's hoping he can.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-3406432162681301002008-10-13T09:54:00.005+01:002008-10-13T10:30:48.153+01:00ALCS game 1 - They get knocked down...Ok, some delayed blogging going on here, and for once its not because I didn't stay up to watch the games live, but rather because <em>I did</em>. I went to bed a 7AM on both Friday and Saturday night (should that be Saturday and Sunday morning?) and believe me the lack of sleep was not conductive to writing of any kind, let alone highly polished (hmmm...) baseball analysis. To be honest I'm still incredibly tired this morning, but I remain totally committed to not missing a single pitch of the Rays' postseason! Anyhow, here's my game 1 recap, game 2 will follow shortly:<br /><br /><strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;">Boston Red Sox</span> 2</span></strong> - <span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 0<br /><br />The story of Friday night's game one was simple. <strong>James Shields</strong> was outstanding. The Rays' hitters were not.<br /><br />Ok, so they did have to deal with an in-form Daisuke Matsuzaka, but despite him holding Tampa Bay hitless through six innings, we still had plenty of chances. Indeed thanks to Shields' performace we had chances to win.<br /><br />The first of those chances came in the first inning when Dice-K walked the bases full of Rays. <strong>Cliff Floyd</strong> couldn't come through in the clutch, and then Matsuzaka settled down. He eased through the next five innings (aided by some very un-selective Rays swinging), until <strong>Carl Crawford</strong> led off the seventh with a single. <strong>Floyd</strong> followed with a single of his own, and the Rays were threatening to tie the game up with runners on first and third and nobody out. No help. Pop fly, strikeout, groundout and the Red Sox were out of the inning.<br /><br />The final chance came in the eighth, and rather summed up the Rays' day at the plate. Singles from <strong>Aki Iwamura</strong> and <strong>BJ Upton</strong> led off the inning, and finally chased Matsuzaka, with Terry Francona bringing in Okajima to face <strong>Carlos Pena</strong>. Pena took 3 straight balls, and then swung at the 3-0 pitch, getting it off the end of the bat and flying out tamely to right. Justin Masterson then came on to pitch to <strong>Evan Longoria</strong> and continued Longo's miserable run at the plate by getting him to ground into a threat- and effectively game-ending double play.<br /><br /><strong>James Shields</strong> (7.1 IP, 6 hits, 2 ER, 2 BB, 6 K) can feel rightly proud of his effort on the mound, but ultimately left with the loss. In total the Rays managed just 4 hits, while striking out 11 times. And just like that, their homefield advantage was gone - to get to the World Series they'd have to win at Fenway.<br /><br />And they would absolutely <strong><em>HAVE </em></strong>to win game 2.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-72759383885968643802008-10-10T09:46:00.005+01:002008-10-10T10:20:48.270+01:00The Rays and the Red Sox...one more timeThe <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays</span></strong> and <strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">Red Sox</span></strong> have played a lot of games since 1998. The Red Sox have won most of them. There's been some important ones (mostly for the Sox). There's been some controversial ones. And there's been some fighting ones.<br /><br />But there has never been one as big as tonight's game.<br /><br />8.37 EST, Tropicana Field, St Petersburg. The Rays will start playing for a place in the World Series.<br /><br />It is almost unbelieveable.<br /><br />And it's fair to say that as excited as I was throughout the regular season, and for the ALDS, I am even more pumped right now. Gametime is 1.37 AM here in the UK, but you can bet your house that I will be staying up to watch it. <strong>James Shields</strong> against Daisuke Matsuzaka for the first step towards the American League pennant. How could I miss it?!<br /><br />And it is only right that, after all the battles (with the bat and ball, and with the fist) this season, the Rays' route to the World Series should come down to a final matchup with Boston. It was the fight for the toughest division in baseball all season long, and it was hard-fought. Not to mention close. 8-1 to the Rays at the Trop, 7-2 to the Sox at Fenway. I think it is fair to say that the two teams are pretty evenly matched.<br /><br />Actually, typing that last sentence still makes me laugh a little. I mean, if you look at the two rosters there's no question that in terms of name recognition, the experience, and perhaps even the individual talent, the edge goes to the Red Sox. Yet somehow the Rays have kept up with (and indeed ahead of) them all season long. It's almost beyond belief. And now we just need to continue defying belief four more times, and we'll be in the World Series.<br /><br />The fact that we are four wins away from the World Series also almost defies my own belief, hence the fact that I have typed World Series so many times - if I say it often enough, I might actually start believing its true!<br /><br /><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays' roster news</span> is that <strong>Joe Maddon</strong> has decided to bring in an extra pitcher for the longer series. And, perhaps surprisingly, <strong>Edwin Jackson</strong> is the man. E-Jax was unlucky to miss out on the fourth starting spot for the postseason, and now will be in the 'pen for potential long relief situations. I'm happy he's going to get to be part of things, but I'm sure he will understand when I say I hope we don't see him pitch at all - as it will likely mean one of our starters has been knocked out early!<br /><br />Making way for Jackson will be <strong>Eric Hinske</strong>, which must have been a terribly tough decision to make. Hinske has been a bit out of form recently, and didn't get any play in the Division Series, but he has been a key part for the club all season long. Unfortunately as things stand <strong>Gabe Gross</strong> is the preferred choice to start in right, and <strong>Fernando Perez</strong> and <strong>Willy Aybar</strong> offer more possibilities off the bench. Still, it's tough when someone who has been a big part of us getting here has to miss out. Also still out are <strong>Troy Percival</strong> and <strong>Shawn Riggans</strong>. Perci has been pitching well in instructional league, and would almost certainly be the one in line should anyone get injured. Meanwhile Riggans has recovered well from the surgery that ended his regular season, but just not quite quickly enough to make it for this series. If we get to play another one though...<br /><br /><strong>Talking of which</strong>, I've been trying to work out what I think is going to happen in the series. You know, hoping to give you some kind of prediction. But while you can all guess what I hope will happen, the truth is I just don't know. I haven't got a clue. The Sox could put their experience to good use and overcome the Rays. The Rays might use their lack of fear and battle past the Sox. It might be one-sided. It might be nip-and-tuck. I literally have no idea. I'm massively excited. And incredibly nervous.<br /><br />And I can't wait for it to get started.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-86145781550137945952008-10-07T09:53:00.004+01:002008-10-07T11:11:58.821+01:00ALDS game 4 - "He is a winner"<strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 6</span></strong> - Chicago White Sox 2<br /><br /><strong>Andy Sonnanstine</strong> over <strong>Edwin Jackson</strong>? <br /><br />I think it would be fair to say that there are not many managers in the big leagues that would make that call. Fortunately for the Rays, <strong>Joe Maddon</strong> is one of them.<br /><br />So it was <strong>Sonny </strong>who went last night in Chicago for game 4, and by the time he left with two outs in the 6th, Joe Maddon was once again looking like the smartest man in baseball. Ok, so 5 2/3 innings isn't the longest outing of the season, and he did give up 2 homeruns. But the way he was pitching, it was almost as if those homers were peace offerings so the White Sox hitters didn't feel too bad about getting totally out-played by a man who doesn't trouble 90 on the radar gun.<br /><br />Apart from those two longballs, all the offense that Chicago generated in those first 5 2/3 innings was a single and a walk, neither of which would damage the Rays in any way. Sonny was at his brilliant best, getting ahead of the hitter, painting the edges, daring them to put the ball in play. And they did. And the Rays defense ate it all up. Truth be told, there wasn't even that many difficult plays to be made - the highlight was a leaping catch at the wall from <strong>Gabe Gross</strong> to rob AJ Pierzynski in the first. Otherwise, it was soild, steady and surefooted. Indeed, had this not been a potential series-clincher, then it is very likely that Sonnanstine would have carried on after giving up a first-pitch homer to Jermaine Dye. He'd only thrown 75 pitches, and was still looking good.<br /><br />But when you've got a bullpen like the Rays, why take the risk?<br /><br />So in came <strong>JP Howell</strong>. And then, four outs later, came <strong>Grant Balfour</strong>. And six outs later the Rays were celebrating again. Over the series, the Rays 'pen pitched 11 2/3 innings and gave up 1 run. Just one.<br /><br />Such quality pitching allowed the <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays</span></strong> to win a best-of-5 series against the hardest-hitting team in the AL while scoring a total of just 21 runs. Each of their three wins needed just 6.<br /><br />Last night the mantra was score early and score often. Rays had a runner cross the plate in the first, third, fourth (2), fifth and seventh. Persistance pays off. Both times the Sox pulled a run back, the Rays came right back and cancelled it out in the top of the next frame. They never let the Sox feel like they were getting close. It was glorious to watch.<br /><br />And it had gotten started in a very pleasing way indeed. <strong>BJ Upton</strong>, fresh off a homerun sunday, came right out swinging again last night, and connected with one out in the first for his second homerun in three at-bats. Two innings later he made it 3 from 4 as he belted another Gavin Floyd offering over the fence in straight away centre. BJ has been playing with a torn labrum in his left shoulder this year, which goes a long way towards explaining his power drop-off compared with last season - but he looks like he might be finding his stroke at just the right time. Which could be absolutely huge for the Rays.<br /><br />After the Upton power outburst, we got back on with scoring in the conventional Rays way - get on, run the bases, clutch hits. An RBI-double from <strong>Cliff Floyd</strong>, an RBI-single from <strong>Dioner Navarro</strong> and a pair of RBIs from <strong>Carlos Pena</strong>, and the Rays were sitting pretty. Carlos had quite a day, going 3-4 with his 2RBI (one particularly sweet, having come after BJ was intentionally walked so that the Sox' lefty could get to Pena), as well as his first two-stolen base game for, well probably longer than he can remember. He also managed to get picked off once as well - its not often that the name Pena dominates the baserunning section of the boxscore! Fortunately some semblance of normality was also around, as <strong>Carl Crawford</strong> also swiped a pair of bags. CC hasn't missed a beat this series despite his hasty return from the DL. Its great to have him back.<br /><br />But despite all the great contributions, and the headlines that BJ will undoubtedly get, in my mind game 4 belongs to <strong>Andy Sonnanstine</strong>. Kaz, Shields and Jackson have the stuff, Shields has the consistancy and control. But don't overlook Sonnanstine. He has something perhaps more important than stuff, consistancy or control. He has the knack. The knack of getting the W on the board. <strong>Joe Maddon</strong> made sure everyone knew it in his post-game interview - "<em>This is typical. He's been a winner all his life... He is a winner. He is well thought-out. And again, you have a lot of faith in him. The guys love playing behind him</em>."<br /><br />Sonny is a winner.<br /><br />And so are the <strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Rays</span></strong>. A 97-game winner. And now, a postseason series winner. Their first, but hopefully not their last.<br /><br /><strong>Next up are some more Sox.</strong> We know these Sox well. They are the <span style="color:#cc0000;">Red Sox</span>. Game one of the American League Championship Series is on Friday night. It's at Tropicana Field. And it's Boston against Tampa Bay. Who would have thought it?!Johnnynoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-64704306835151417432008-10-06T10:18:00.003+01:002008-10-06T10:40:38.141+01:00ALDS game 3 - Not over yet<span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 3 - <strong><span style="font-size:130%;">Chicago White Sox 5</span></strong><br /><br />The recipe was almost the same. An early deficit. A battling comeback. All that was missing was the happy ending.<br /><br />Winning at the Trop against an experienced Chicago team is one thing. Doing so at a raucous US Cellular Field is quite another. Yet, that being said, the Rays made another good go of it last night in a rain-delayed, must-win game for the Sox.<br /><br />We actually got on the board first thanks to an RBI-infield single from <strong>Aki Iwamura</strong> in the second. Perhaps a sign of things to come had already been shown at that stage however, as we left two men aboard in each of the first two innings against an impressive John Danks. We didn't take the chance to really get on top early and ultimately paid for it.<br /><br />On the hill for the Rays, <strong>Matt Garza</strong> was mostly solid. He allowed the Sox to tie the game in the third, but generally had made a good start. Then came his bogey inning, the fourth, and a breakout for Chicago. Garza gave up a lead off double to Thome, and the Sox took advantage, eventually scoring three times in the frame to move into a lead that they wouldn't lose. They added another in the sixth to complete their scoring for the day.<br /><br />Garza's final line (6IP, 7H, 5R, 4BB, 4Ks) wasn't his best, but was the sort of start that more often than not gives the hitters a chance. And, considering the power of the White Sox lineup, it can probably be counted as a successful start for a game in which he was lacking his best stuff.<br /><br />The Rays' hitters though struggled against Danks. Nothing to show from the third, fourth, fifth or sixth.<br /><br />But the battling remained. <strong>Rocco Baldelli</strong> led off the seventh with a walk. Bartlett and Iwamura couldn't get him in, but with 2 out <strong>BJ Upton</strong> stepped to the plate and crushed a prodigous homerun into the seats in left. 5-3, and the game was back on. <strong>Carlos Pena</strong> followed with a single, bringing the tying run to the plate in the shape of <strong>Evan Longoria</strong>. Ozzie Guillen went to the 'pen and brought in the veteran Dotel, who proved his worth ending the threat with a called third strike to Longo. <br /><br />And that was that. Nothing much doing for the Rays in the eighth or ninth, and a first ever postseason loss to cut their series lead to 2-1. Considering the early pressure the Rays put on Danks, it was a disappointing showing in the end. Some impatient hitting, admittedly combined with some impressive pitching, meant that to be honest even after BJ's homerun you never really got that special Rays' comeback feeling.<br /><br /><strong>Still, two more chances</strong> to wrap things up. The first of which is tonight in what is a <em>MASSIVE</em> game for Andy Sonnanstine. He has been great all year, and I'm a big fan, but this is going to test him like never before. While a loss isn't the end of the world, going back to the Trop for a winner-takes-all decider is a far from ideal position to be in. Add to that the homerun-hitting lineup to the power nature of the park, and its a huge challenge. Perhaps even moreso for a pitcher like Sonny who relies on making hitters put the ball in play. He's going to need to pitch just about his best game of the season, with more pressure than he's ever experienced.<br /><br />It's a big ask. <br /><br />Go on Sonny, we believe!!!Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-16931439789843585292008-10-04T11:57:00.004+01:002008-10-04T12:35:58.356+01:00ALDS game 2 - Perseverance, thy name is RaysChicago White Sox 2 - <strong><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span> 6</span></strong><br /><br /><strong>Scott Kazmir</strong> was asked in the lead up to yesterday's game which Scott Kazmir would show up for game 2 of the American League Division Series.<br /><br />"Hopefully the good Scott Kazmir"<br /><br />Uh-huh. With the bases loaded and nobody out in the top of the first, the good Scott Kazmir was looking like a distant dream. (Just for the record, I don't agree with Harold Reynolds' assertion that Kaz hit leadoff man Orlando Cabrera on purpose in retaliation for Thursday's war of words. I think it was a pure lack of control early on.).<br /><br />By the time <strong>Scotty K</strong> had gotten out of the first, he had thrown 37 pitches and faced 8 White Sox hitters. The good (nay, amazing) news was that he had limited them to just two runs, a fine effort given the start he made. Still, things didn't look too good. He struggled again through the second, but this time held the Sox scoreless. <strong>David Price</strong> and <strong>Chad Bradford</strong> had both already been up in the 'pen, but Scotty kept going.<br /><br />A scoreless third. A scoreless fourth. A scoreless fifth. He eventually left having battled through 5 1/3 innings, allowing 8 hits and 2 walks, but crucially just those two early runs. Kaz may not be at his best (or indeed anywhere near it) this year, but he has got a lot of heart, and he really showed it yesterday.<br /><br />And, by the time he left, thanks to the ever-ready-to-fight Rays hitters, he was in line for the W. <strong>Dioner Navarro</strong> had pulled one back with an RBI-single in the first, before <strong>Aki Iwamura</strong> came to the plate with a man on in the bottom of the fifth.<br /><br />During the regular season Aki had hit 6 homeruns, all of them off of rightys. But yesterday he stayed with a pitch from the lefty Buehrle and drilled it into the seats in left-centre. 3-2 Rays, and I think judging from the reaction in the dugout it was a moment that the whole team enjoyed rather a lot!<br /><br />From there on in, it was up to the 'pen to protect the lead, and protect they did. With a threat brewing in the sixth, <strong>Grant Balfour</strong> came in and extinguished it big time, as he has done so regularly. He came back out for the seventh, and gave up two singles before Joe Maddon made another call to the 'pen.<br /><br />Enter Mr Clutch the Reliever. If Kaz had been hard-working, and Balfour explosive, then <strong>JP Howell</strong> was simply brilliant. As he has done so often, he stubbed out the threat with the minimum of effort, setting down Thome, Ramirez and Pierzynski with ease. He came back and pitched a scoreless eighth as well. JP Howell is simply awesome out of the 'pen.<br /><br />And that performance gave the hitters the chance to add some insurance, which they did with style in the bottom of the eighth. <strong>BJ Upton</strong> opened up with a triple to centre. <strong>Carl Crawford</strong> follwed with an RBI-single, then stole second and moved up to third on a groundout as <strong>Rocco Baldelli</strong> stepped in. He duly followed with an RBI-single of his own, and proceeded to steal the show when <strong>Dioner Navarro</strong> stepped in - demonstrating the epitomy of 2008 Rays baseball. Navvy lifted a blooper into short right, and with two outs, Rocco took off. The ball fell between the three converging White Sox, but as it was picked up Rocco was just approaching third. He didn't stop though as he rounded the bag at full throttle and flew across the plate, scoring on what had become an RBI-double for Navarro that had travelled about 160 feet. Awesome hustle for Rocco, and a four run lead to take into the ninth.<br /><br />Not that such a big margin was needed though, as <strong>Chad Bradford</strong> breezed through the heart of the Chicago order, with the help of a nicely turned double play and a called third strike to Jim Thome.<br /><br /><strong>So, a 2-0 series lead</strong> heading up to Chicago for Sunday evening's game three. Its a great position to be in, but I'm under no illusions that its going to be easy - US Cellular Field is a tough place to play, and the Sox will be sending another lefty to the hill. We'll be countering with <strong>Matt Garza</strong>, who I'm sure will be extra pumped up. Let's hope he can use it to his advantage!Johnnynoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9183877378537131545.post-34697944118582731802008-10-03T09:23:00.003+01:002008-10-03T10:02:22.784+01:00ALDS game 1 - Welcome to the postseason Mr LongoriaChicago White Sox 4 - <span style="font-size:130%;"><strong><span style="color:#99ffff;">Tampa Bay Rays</span></strong> <strong>6</strong></span><br /><br />I'm willing to bet that there's not many people out there who had remembered that Gary Gaetti hit homeruns in each of his first two postseason at-bats.<br /><br />Something tells me that you're going to remember that Evan did it.<br /><br />Because this 22-year-old rookie is a bit special. I mean, he missed a whole month of the season through injury, yet still led all rookies in homeruns. He hit three longballs in one game, just a couple of weeks <em>after</em> his return from a fractured wrist. And now this.<br /><br />First pitch - homerun. Third pitch - homerun. Then an RBI single, a walk and just for good measure a stolen base. Just your average sort of day when your name is <strong>Evan Longoria</strong>.<br /><br />Needless to say that, despite the nerves, I enjoyed last night's first taste of Rays' playoff baseball. Taking the lead on Evan's first homer really settled things down, although they were unsettled again in the top of the next inning thanks to some patented White Sox offense. <strong>James Shields</strong> had started well, but worked into a little bit of trouble in the third and paid the price, giving up a 3-run homer to Dewayne Wise. Add to that the fact that <strong>Carlos Pena</strong> had been taken out of the game already due to some blurry vision (he's expected to be back and fine today), and the nerves were full on again.<br /><br />But hey, this is the Rays. Battle, battle, and battle back some more. Bottom of the inning, <strong>Jason Bartlett</strong> singles. <strong>Aki Iwamura</strong> follows and drills a ball over Ken Griffey Jr's head for a RBI-triple. 3-2. Upton can't get him home, but Pena's replacement at first, <strong>Willy Aybar</strong>, can, with a sacrifice fly to left. 3-3. And next up? Well, its <strong>Evan</strong> of course. 4-3. And just like that, Shields is back on top and we're laughing.<br /><br />The Rays tacked on a couple more in the fifth through RBI-singles from<strong> Longoria</strong> and <strong>Carl Crawford</strong>, while Shields breezed through until the seventh where he again hit trouble. He had loaded the bases with one out when the the call went to the 'pen for <strong><em>the Aussie</em></strong>. And a good call it was too. He struck out Juan Uribe, and then, after a bit of a shouting match, struck out Orlando Cabrera too. You've got to give credit to Cabrera, I don't think I'd want to get <strong>Grant Balfour </strong>mad (well madder...), but the Aussie had the last laugh.<br /><br />Balfour's 2/3 of an inning were huge, but <strong>JP Howell's</strong> perfect 8th was just as important, striking out Anderson and Dye, before getting Thome out on a weak grounder. Howell doing what he has done best all season long.<br /><br />That took things into the ninth, and <strong>Dan Wheeler</strong>. Wheels seems to have learnt the art of closing from Troy Percival, delighting in making things interesting. And he did that, battling a long at-bat with Paul Konerko, which saw the White Sox first baseman try to walk on ball three before eventually connecting for a crushed homerun down the leftfield line. Credit to Wheeler though, he didn't let it get to him, and came right back after the next hitter (Griffey!) and the next and the next, setting them down confidently and preserving the Ray's first ever playoff win. Oh yeah.<br /><br /><strong>Tonight, Scott Kazmir</strong> faces off against Mark Buehrle in game two. Its going to be a massive test for Kaz - going up against the majors' biggest homerun team, having given up four longballs in two of his last three starts. Here's hoping that Scotty will thrive under the playoff spotlight and perform at his best. You know I'll be watching and cheering him on.Johnnynoreply@blogger.com0